It's mind over matter as the Bazball Ashes commence

Big picture: Enter the Ashes paradox

At what stage will it all begin to matter?Will it come when the teams line up for the national anthem, when the passion of the Hollies Stand seeps through the implacable demeanours of an England team that has been trained in the art of un-think?Will it come when Joe Root is awoken from a Marnus Labuschagne-style slumber, to assess a scoreline of 2 for 2 in the second over, whereupon all those ghastly memories of Ashes past will start banging down the doors of his frontal cortex?Will it come when Steve Smith, with seven centuries in his past 11 Tests in England, survives his first catchable edge through the cordon, thereby causing the Dorian Grey-style portrait in James Anderson’s locker to spontaneously combust and reveal him for the grumpy old 40-year-old that we all know still lurks beneath his Bazballed veneer?Related

  • Can England maintain their tactics under an Australian assault? That will decide the result of the Ashes

  • Will Bazball work against Australia? Where will the Ashes be won and lost?

  • Breaking down how England learned to Baz-bowl

  • Stokes declares himself fit to bowl in first Ashes Test

  • Fairway to heaven? The golfers' guide to Test-match preparation

Or is all this for real? And have England genuinely and irrevocably transformed the parameters of Test-match cricket, by treating every facet of the contest as their personal playground, thereby consigning 146 years of history and precedent to the recycling bin?The brilliance of Bazball (and no, it doesn’t matter who coined that term either…) is that it has stripped away the angst and the hang-ups, and left a group of immensely talented ball-players with nothing to declare but their genius. And yet, with respect to the opponents whom they’ve for the most part chewed up in the past 12 months – including an Ireland team for whom Test cricket also didn’t seem to matter – Stokes’ men will not yet have encountered an occasion quite like the one that’s looming on Friday morning. A packed and rapt Edgbaston, expectant as England’s crowds have tended to be all year long, but energised with a slightly different, more epochal tinge – perhaps more akin to a World Cup final than your average bilateral engagement.The 2023 Ashes gets underway at Edgbaston on Friday morning•Getty Images

And for that reason, we could be about to encounter the Ashes paradox, a never-before-accessed portal on England’s space-time continuum, where two (and in fact, maybe more than two) implacable truths are about to meet head-on.On the one hand, the Ashes doesn’t matter. Test cricket doesn’t matter. This preview doesn’t matter. Every opinion that has ever been voiced about Zak Crawley’s competence as an England opener doesn’t matter. The only thing that matters is watching the ball, and hitting it as hard and as often as possible. And even that doesn’t matter (unless of course you’re driving down the 18th at Loch Lomond).But on the other hand, the Ashes matters more – and to more England sports fans, casual and otherwise – than perhaps the rest of Test cricket combined. The monstrous hype machine, unleashed by the extraordinary events of 2005 and scarcely reined in thereafter, has been complicit in the gnawing-away of the very fabric of the sport, to the extent that England all but tanked the format two winters ago with, as Stuart Broad put it, a “void” of a display on their last tour Down Under.And so, if England’s response this time out has been to block out the hype, then that’s not quite the same as disproving its existence in the first place. At some stage this summer – whether it’s the mounting buzz of sports-loving sun-seekers with no global football tournament to congregate around, or the encroaching dread of a strategy that has been found out – the Bazball bubble is sure to be breached by onset of real-think.For the time being, however, it’s the over-think that’s in over-drive. For all of Ben Stokes’ admirable commitment to entertainment, what happens if England are 2-1 up going into the Oval Test, and the opportunity arises to bat Australia out of the contest? Do they accept the bore-draw and the return of the urn, or are they morally obliged to do as they did with New Zealand in Wellington, and risk the series for the sake of keeping things fun?And what of the team selection for this first Test at Edgbaston. For all of Stokes’ talk of “fast, flat pitches”, England have opted to leave Mark Wood in mothballs! Is this an admission that their attack is undercooked after a spate of recent injuries, or were they spooked by the recent flat deck at Lord’s, where a lack of extreme pace enabled Ireland to make unexpected hay in the second innings? These might all be rhetorical worries, but they’ll be resonant ones too … even for a side that is determined to lock out the noise.And, in keeping with the fact that the hype of the Ashes tends to overshadow everything else, none of the above even takes into account the fact that Australia have dispatched a generationally great team to challenge for their first series win in England since 2001.Last week, they warmed up for the Ashes – and look, there’s that hype again – by winning the small matter of the World Test Championship final at The Oval. It was a crushingly effective performance too, one that overcame a rigorous new-ball examination from an India attack that’s very much the equal of England’s, before piling on the pain on a hard and true wicket that may well have been ordered with Bazball in mind, but clearly didn’t do Travball’s ambitions any harm either.And then there’s the bowling. It’s become a bit of a stuck record in the past 12 months – various fans and pundits saying “yeah, but just you wait until England try that against X and Y …” – although the manner in which Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammad Shami were dispatched on this very ground last summer augurs well in that regard.But an attack led by Pat Cummins, whose relentless off-stump accuracy and persistent 90mph pace is a combination that few quick bowlers can truly replicate, and one in which a spin bowler with 487 Test wickets is seriously being discussed as the weak(er) link, now that truly does pose a challenge over and above anything England have yet encountered.All the same, here we are, on the eve of a mouth-wateringly tasty contest, with two blank slates and the summer set fair before us. Who truly knows what matters anymore. But it’s safe to say, we’re ready as cricket fans to believe the hype, even if the teams themselves will be keeping those eyes wide shut for a while yet.

Form guide

England WLWWW
Australia WDWLL

In the spotlight: Moeen Ali and David Warner

“Ashes?” “lol”.No single exchange could better encapsulate the absurd genius of Ben Stokes’ captaincy. Moeen Ali might have assumed Stokes’ tap-up was a wind-up, but we know already that he had been tempted by a recall ahead of the Pakistan tour last winter – and now it’s official. A team ethic based on vibes, golf, optional nets and – in Moeen’s particular case – fried chicken is quite literally irresistible, even to a guy who was through with red-ball cricket back in September 2021, and has endured a singularly miserable time against Australia in particular – from being called “Osama” in the 2015 series, to his ripped-finger woes in Australia in 2017-18, to his scapegoating at Edgbaston after one poor Test in 2019. Everything about this comeback feels wrong … except for the precise context in which he’s come back. No hinterland, no pressure, no worries. Take some wickets, have some fun. Win the Ashes? Yeah, sure. Why not?WTC in the bag, the Australian team have their eyes set on the Ashes•Getty Images

Not since Steve Waugh and his red-hankied send-off in 2004 has an Australian cricketer set himself up for quite such an elongated farewell as with David Warner. He has nominated the New Year Test against Pakistan at Sydney for his final goodbye, and having played a small but significant role in the WTC final victory over India at The Oval last week, it feels as though he’s back in charge of his own destiny in that regard. But in the meantime, he’s got the mental hurdle of the 2019 Ashes to overcome, in which he averaged 9.50 in ten innings, and was eviscerated time and again by Stuart Broad and his round-the-wicket angle (when asked if that had been a factor in Broad’s selection, Stokes admitted: “I’d be lying if I said no”). A new method of marking his guard – in effect digging two trenches on leg and off stump to prevent his trigger movements from straying out of line – may help him combat that awkward angle, even if his team-mates might find it a touch off-putting. But if Warner needed any more encouragement to live in the now, and forget about past indignities, then he’s come to the right series.

Team news: Broad retained ahead of Wood

Ben Stokes bowls during England training•Getty Images

One Test into the summer, one huge call already made. England’s stated aim since Stokes and McCullum took the helm has been to play their best available XI in every game – but to judge by Broad’s phlegmatic comments after the Ireland Test last week, not even he believed he was likely to play in the series opener if all their other seamers were fit. However, Mark Wood hasn’t bowled a ball in anger since a fiery stint for Lucknow Super Giants in the IPL in April, and the road ahead will be long and intense for the quicks on both sides. And so, with the confidence of a five-wicket haul at Lord’s – plus the prospect of a reunion with his old sparring partner, Warner – England have opted to trust Broad’s experience and big-game , much as they chose (to his intense annoyance) to overlook them at Brisbane 18 months ago.Only time will tell whether Broad’s return is a reflection on Stokes’ readiness to fulfil his allrounder’s workload. He was putting his left knee through its paces in training, under the watchful eye of David Saker and the strength and conditioning coach, and declared himself fit to bowl on match eve, but Wood’s presence as an impact bowler would clearly benefit from being part of a guaranteed five-man attack. Either way, it means that Moeen’s return to the ranks, after an absence of 21 matches across 21 months of red-ball retirement, has been relegated to the second-most notable item of team news. Which is, in itself, a reflection of quite how crazy this series could turn out to be.England: 1 Zak Crawley, 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Ollie Pope, 4 Joe Root, 5 Harry Brook, 6 Ben Stokes (capt), 7 Jonny Bairstow (wk), 8 Moeen Ali, 9 Ollie Robinson, 10 Stuart Broad, 11 James AndersonAustralia have a similarly tough call to make in their bowling ranks, which boasts a rare embarrassment of riches. If Josh Hazlewood were to play ahead of Scott Boland, then their four-man attack would – for the first time in Test history – all boast more than 200 Test wickets. However, Boland’s startlingly under-stated displays make him incredibly hard to sideline. He offers nagging accuracy, guaranteed seam movement, and more pace than his languid demeanour would otherwise suggest, all wrapped up in a Test average of 14.57 and topped with an uncanny ability to strike in his opening spell of a contest. And, with Australia mindful of the pressure that constant line and length can build on even the most free-flowing of batters, if anyone were to make way for Hazlewood’s return, it could yet be Mitchell Starc, whose four wickets in the WTC final came at an economy rate of close to 5.5 an over. It’s a good problem to have, you might say.No such problems in their batting line-up – in particular that middle-order trio of Marnus Labuschagne, Steve Smith and Travis Head who, according to the ICC Test batting rankings, have reached heights not touched since West Indies were in their pomp in December 1984. Throw in Cameron Green, flushed with confidence after a stellar IPL and primed to challenge Stokes as this summer’s pre-eminent allrounder, and it’s little wonder they are approaching this campaign with quiet confidence.Australia: (possible) 1 David Warner, 2 Usman Khawaja, 3 Marnus Labuschagne, 4 Steve Smith, 5 Travis Head, 6 Cameron Green, 7 Alex Carey (wk), 8 Mitchell Starc, 9 Pat Cummins (capt), 10 Nathan Lyon, 11 Scott Boland

Pitch and conditions

Brendon McCullum and Jonny Bairstow inspect the pitch•PA Images via Getty Images

It’s been a sweltering week in the UK, and though the first two days at Edgbaston look set to be scorchers, there’s a strong possibility of rain interruptions from Sunday onwards which may play a part in how this contest shakes down. A straw-coloured pitch has been rolled out in the centre of Edgbaston, and to judge by McCullum and Jonny Bairstow’s firm pushings and knockings on the eve of the contest, it’s likely to be hard and true, just as ordered.

Stats and trivia

  • Australia go into the Ashes boasting the top three batters in Test cricket, according to the ICC’s updated rankings, with Head’s century in the World Test Championship final lifting him to a career-high of No.3, behind Labuschagne (1) and Smith (2).
  • Anderson is set to feature in his tenth consecutive Ashes series, having picked up 112 wickets at 33.76 in his previous 35 Tests against Australia. By the time the match begins, he will have been a Test cricketer for more than 20 years, having played the first of his 180 caps against Zimbabwe in May 2003.
  • Moeen needs five more wickets to reach 200 in Tests, and 86 more runs to reach 3000 – two milestones he never envisaged after retiring from the format 21 months ago.
  • Stokes, meanwhile, needs six wickets to reach the 200 mark. However, he has taken just two wickets in his last six appearances due to concerns over his left knee.
  • Smith needs 53 more runs to reach 9000 Test runs, a mark that only Allan Border, Steve Waugh and Ricky Ponting have previously passed among Australians. If he achieves that score in the first innings, he will keep his average in the 60s.

Quotes

“A player like Mo who I have seen put in some unbelievable match-winning performances, albeit a long time ago, was something I couldn’t look past. That was a stomach and a heart feeling, rather than my brain. Generally I have stuck with my heart and my gut throughout my captaincy so far. Moeen Ali is going to come in here and I am looking at what he can offer on his best days, and not worrying anything else.”
“They’re obviously a very good white-ball team England, but Test cricket’s different, the ball moves a little bit differently. You can’t always bat exactly like you would in a one-day game and I think that’s the strength of our bowling unit.”
Pat Cummins, Australia’s captain, backs his bowlers to bazooka Bazball

رئيس الاتحاد المغربي: لا نحلم بالفوز بـ كأس أمم إفريقيا القادمة.. ونسعى لطموحات مشروعة

يرى فوزي لقجع، رئيس الاتحاد المغربي لكرة القدم، أن فوز منتخب بلاده ببطولة كأس أمم إفريقيا القادمة التي تقام في الأراضي المغربية، ليس حلمًا له.

ومن المقرر إقامة بطولة كأس أمم إفريقيا 2025 في المغرب، خلال الفترة من 21 ديسمبر 2025 إلى 18 يناير 2026.

ونقل موقع “البطولة المغربي”، تصريحات فوزي لقجع في مقابلة أجراها مع صحيفة “ليكيب” الفرنسية، والتي قال فيها: “الفوز بلقب كأس أمم إفريقيا “المغرب 2025″، في نسخته القادمة، يُعد طموحا مشروعا”.

وأضاف: “نحن لا نحلم بالفوز بكأس الأمم الإفريقية، بل نسعى لتحقيق طموح مشروع، مُشيرا إلى أن المغرب يملك جميع الإمكانيات للتتويج باللقب القاري، بوجود أسماء كبيرة في صفوفه مثل أشرف حكيمي.

طالع | الهلال السعودي يقترب من التعاقد مع مهاجم منتخب المغرب

وأوضح: “المنتخب المغربي، يضع نصب عينيه، تقديم أداء مُميز في بطولة كأس العالم 2026، التي ستُنظم بشكل مشترك بين الولايات المتحدة الأمريكية، المكسيك وكندا”.

وأتم: “الظهور بأداء أفضل من نسخة قطر سيكون هدفنا في المونديال القادم، ولن ننتظر حتى عام 2030 لتحقيق ذلك”.

Maya Jama to be joined on Love Island by son of ex-Premier League striker as return to work scheduled after summer holiday with Man City boyfriend Ruben Dias

The son of a former Watford and Stoke striker is set to appear with Maya Jama on the latest series of the ITV2 reality show which kicks off next week.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

Jama hosting 12th Love Island seriesTwo footballers set to stay in the villaShow returns on 9 JuneFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Two footballers are set to appear on the latest series of ITV2 reality show Love Island. The lineup has been confirmed and among the 12 contestants are Dejon Noel-Williams, a semi-professional and son of former Watford and Stoke striker Gifton, and Harry Cooksley, who turns out for Southern League Premier South side Farnham Town and has been dubbed 'The Surrey Zidane'.

AdvertisementTHE BIGGER PICTURE

The series is hosted by Jama, who recently flew back from a romantic vacation in Italy with Manchester City defender Ruben Dias. The show is filmed in Mallorca in a rural villa called Sa Vinyassa.

DID YOU KNOW?

Gifton Noel-Williams made the majority of his career appearances in England's lower divisions but did play three times during Watford's ill-fated 1999-00 Premier League campaign. He later had spells with Stoke and Burnley before a journeyman-esque end to his career which included stints with Real Murcia, Elche, Millwall, Austin Aztek and Codicote.

ENJOYED THIS STORY?

Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

Getty Images EntertainmentWHAT NEXT?

The latest season of Love Island premieres on Monday 9 June, with plenty of dramatic moments expected on the show's tenth anniversary.

Forest fairytale, Bournemouth miracle? Every PL team in the European run-in

With the season approaching its business end, a lot of the attention will focus on the race to secure Champions League football. While the title race and relegation battle seem all but over, the makeup of England’s European contingent looks set to go to the wire.

As it stands, it is not set in stone how many English teams will be involved in next season’s Champions League, partly owing to the amount of Premier League teams still left in this year’s European competitions.

That can make the picture for the Champions League spots a rather murky one, but all will become clear in the end. Here, we take a look at the race and which clubs stand a chance of performing on the continental stage in 2025/26.

How many teams will England have in the 2025/26 Champions League?

At present, England will almost certainly have five teams in next season’s Champions League. In addition to the standard four places, English clubs’ performances this year mean that, bar a ridiculous set of results, they will earn a fifth slot via one of UEFA’s European Performance Spots.

With only two out of seven English clubs out at this late stage, they have the best coefficient value for the season, ahead of Spain, who are near-certainties for the other slot, as well as Italy and Germany.

There is a scenario where they have as many as seven in the Champions League alone, though that would rely on some bizarre combinations, one of which includes Spurs winning a trophy.

Joking aside, any team still alive at the quarter-final stage is in with a shout, and with competition winners qualifying automatically, league position would not be a factor. Therefore, Tottenham, Manchester United and Aston Villa could win a European trophy and nab a place regardless of their final league position.

Will England get a 5th Champions League place? UEFA's rules explained

Plenty of clubs could be eyeing 5th place if the Premier League earns an extra CL slot.

1 ByRoss Kilvington Feb 10, 2025 Who will qualify for the 2025/26 Champions League?

For the purpose of this article, let’s assume there will be five Champions League qualifiers, as expected.

With such an open race for all three European competitions, there are only a few certainties with nine games remaining. There will be several Premier League sides targeting a top-five finish, but who is in the best position to claim a Champions League spot?

Below is the current state of play, including every remaining fixture for the teams in contention.

Liverpool (1st, 70 points, +42 GD)

Liverpool stars Virgil van Dijk and Mohamed Salah

The most likely outcome for this season is Liverpool winning the league, and therefore claiming another Champions League berth for 2025/26.

The Reds were knocked out in the round of 16 this year despite topping the all-new league phase, though with a Premier League title win under their belts, they will surely already be making plans for a deeper run next term.

Only a disaster will plunge Arne Slot’s side out of title contention, even with rivals Arsenal still to visit Anfield.

Date

Competition

Opponent

H/A

2nd April

Premier League

Everton

H

6th April

Premier League

Fulham

A

13th April

Premier League

West Ham

H

20th April

Premier League

Leicester

A

27th April

Premier League

Tottenham

H

4th May

Premier League

Chelsea

A

10th May

Premier League

Arsenal

H

18th May

Premier League

Brighton

A

25th May

Premier League

Crystal Palace

H

Arsenal (2nd, 58 points, +29 GD)

Arsenal may be left to settle for second place once again this term, though their place in next season’s Champions League looks relatively safe.

As it stands, they have an 11-point gap between them and sixth-placed Newcastle United, and Mikel Arteta’s side arguably have a kinder run-in than others. It would be a shock if they require a result of any kind heading into the final day, when they visit a doomed Southampton.

Nottingham Forest (3rd, 54 points, +14 GD)

Nottingham Forest managerNunoEspirito Santo is seen before the match

Only Nottingham Forest’s inexperience throws their Champions League credentials into doubt, as Nuno Espirito Santo’s side remain on the verge of completing a historic campaign.

Six clear of fourth-placed Chelsea as we approach April, Forest are in what would be a pretty strong position for a seasoned European contender.

But off the back of escaping relegation last year, Forest have confounded critics all season, and will need to dig deep to return to Europe’s premier club competition next term.

Still navigating an FA Cup run, the Reds have a decent stretch of fixtures to end the season – though all eyes could well be on the City Ground on the final day, when they take on a Chelsea side potentially needing to fulfil European ambitions of their own.

Chelsea (4th, 49 points, +16 GD)

Chelsea's Marc Cucurella celebrates scoring their first goal with Enzo Fernandez

Title contenders earlier in the year, Enzo Maresca’s Chelsea are now set to settle for a Champions League place at best.

Their place in that competition is far from certain, though, as the Blues are now just six points ahead of 10th-placed Bournemouth. Four of their last nine opponents this term are top-half rivals and must also face Spurs and Man Utd before the season’s end.

Chelsea may yet get Europa League football back at Stamford Bridge as they seek Conference League glory later this year.

Man City (5th, 48 points, +15 GD)

Marmoush

Manchester City’s title defence is going down with a whimper, so much so that it is still unclear which European competition they will qualify for next term.

As it stands, they are poised to take England’s fifth Champions League spot, though a positive end to the year could still see them qualify more comfortably.

But City have shown their vulnerabilities all too often this term, and with the Citizens in the midst of a tight race for European football, they could just as easily plummet further down the table if they are unable to see of the challenges of Newcastle et al.

Newcastle United (6th, 47 points, +9 GD)

Newcastle United's AlexanderIsakcelebrates scoring their second goal

Newcastle United are guaranteed some form of European football thanks to their EFL Cup triumph in March, though they will be hoping to return to the Champions League having got a taste for it last season.

While they currently trail the likes of Manchester City and Chelsea, they have played a game fewer than all their main rivals, meaning a top-four place is in their hands.

However, with trips to Aston Villa, Brighton and Arsenal still to come, they will have to pull out all the stops to secure Champions League football for 2025/26.

Brighton & Hove Albion (7th, 47 points, +6 GD)

Having been left in 10th place after an eighth Premier League game without a win in early January, Brighton hardly looked like making a success of Fabian Hurzeler’s first campaign in charge.

But a chastening 7-0 defeat to Nottingham Forest appeared to transform the Seagulls’ season, with the south coast side winning six of their following seven in all competitions, with their only failure coming in a draw against reigning champions City.

Suddenly, European football is on the cards once again, and a route via the FA Cup is also still possible.

Fulham (8th, 45 points, +5 GD)

Rodrigo Muniz for Fulham.

Fulham have been consistently impressive all year, and stand a chance of a top-seven finish which would mark a first return to Europe since the 2011/12 season.

Also still in the FA Cup, there are a number of routes available to Marco Silva’s side, though the cup may be their most realistic given that they must still face four of the current top five in the run-in, including Manchester City on the final day.

A Champions League slot therefore looks like a longshot, but finishing 8th could yet mean a European place if an English club takes home one of the European trophies.

Aston Villa (9th, 45 points, -4 GD)

Aston Villa have had a year to remember, with the Villans into the Champions League quarter-finals having been a Championship outfit just six years ago.

However, the destiny of next season is still undetermined, as they have been unable to maintain the levels that saw them finish fourth last term.

That said, a solid run in the league should secure European football of some kind, while the only way they can guarantee Champions League football at this stage is going all the way – which likely means defeating PSG, Real Madrid and Barcelona.

Unfortunately, cup opponents Preston North End and Southampton are the only two sides they will face that are not involved in the race for Europe, meaning every single clash is crucial as far as their European hopes are concerned.

Bournemouth (10th, 44 points, +12 GD)

Justin Kluivert for Bournemouth.

Perhaps the biggest outsiders for Champions League football in the Premier League are Bournemouth, who had been floating around fifth place until losing three of their last four top-flight games.

However, Andoni Iraola’s Cherries are still well within a shout of securing a European place, with England’s likely fifth Champions League slot providing a slim chance of the ultimate prize.

Trips to Arsenal and Man City look ominous, but they have upset the big boys before this season, and a strong run-in will almost certainly be enough for a first European campaign in their history.

Teams with an outside chance Manchester United (Europa League quarter-finalists)

While the route to the Champions League via the league is closed off to the vastly underperforming Red Devils, Manchester United could yet be mixing it with the big boys again next year by taking home the Europa League.

Ruben Amorim’s side are into the last eight after seeing off Real Sociedad in the last 16, and a tie with Lyon has them just five matches away from another European trophy.

Sitting 11 points off fifth, winning the Europa League is the only way to salvage what has been a tumultuous campaign.

Tottenham Hotspur (Europa League quarter-finalists)

TottenhamHotspur's James Maddisoncelebrates scoring their second goal with teammates

Also in desperate need for success are Tottenham Hotspur, who may yet turn a terrible domestic campaign into one of continental glory with victory in the Europa League.

The Lilywhites are set to face Eintracht Frankfurt for a place in the last four, and with Ange Postecoglou’s side languishing in 14th place at the time of writing, a Europa League triumph is the only way into the Champions League next season.

Of course, it would also mark a first major trophy in nearly two decades.

Vítor Pereira diz que 'desistir não é uma opção' para o Corinthians contra o Flamengo

MatériaMais Notícias

A missão do Corinthians nesta terça-feira (9) não é fácil. O clube alvinegro precisa reverter uma desvantagem de dois gols contra o Flamengo para avançar às semifinais da Libertadores. Apesar do cenário desfavorável, o técnico Vítor Pereiradestacou o espírito de luta e superação do Timão para seguir acreditando na classificação.

continua após a publicidadeRelacionadasCorinthiansWillian treina com bola e será reforço do Corinthians em jogo decisivo contra o FlamengoCorinthians08/08/2022CorinthiansCorinthians abre venda de ingressos para Dérbi contra o Palmeiras no BrasileirãoCorinthians08/08/2022LibertadoresFlamengo x Corinthians: prováveis times, desfalques e onde assistir ao duelo pela LibertadoresLibertadores08/08/2022

+ GALERIA – Relembre todas as remontadas do Corinthians neste século

– Se não acreditarmos, nem vale a pena viajarmos. O corintiano é assim mesmo, um espírito de superação, de caráter. Desistir não é uma opção. Isso eu aprendi mesmo antes de chegar, percebi que este era o espírito, portanto, vamos acreditar e competir com organização, caráter e superação – disse o português à Corinthians TV.

Ainda no espírito de luta e fé, o técnico corintiano ressaltou a qualidade do elenco para repetir o que os cariocas fizeram na Neo Química Arena.

– Temos que acreditar todos, temos que ir com espírito de fazer gol e tornar a vida mais complicada para o Flamengo, assim como eles fizeram aqui. Nós temos qualidade para fazer isso lá e competir por esta eliminatória – continuou o comandante corintiano – concluiu Vítor Pereira.

+ TABELA – Timão ou Flamengo? Simule os jogos da Libertadores

A delegação corintiana já está no Rio de Janeiro, onde ficará concentrada até o momento de partida para o Maracanã.

O Corinthians foi derrotado pelo Flamengo, na Neo Química Arena, por 2 a 0. Qualquer vitória da equipe de Vítor Pereira por dois gols de diferença levará a decisão aos pênaltis. O Time do Povo avança com um triunfo por três ou mais gols de diferença.

Fabrizio Romano: Berta will make "important" Arsenal proposal for £125m star

Arsenal, led by new sporting director Andrea Berta, are set to move for an “underrated” marquee player this summer, according to reliable transfer journalist Fabrizio Romano.

Andrea Berta's rumoured transfer plans for Arsenal

Berta signed as Arsenal’s director three weeks ago, and since the Italian’s appointment to replace Edu Gaspar, Mikel Arteta’s side have been tipped for an exciting summer transfer window.

Arsenal hold early talks to sign £50m striker likened to Neymar and Mbappe

He’s compared to two of world football’s most iconic superstars of recent years.

ByEmilio Galantini Mar 28, 2025

Berta could apparently have a £300 million transfer warchest to spend on up to seven new signings at the Emirates Stadium, according to GiveMeSport, with Arsenal potentially planning to bring in a new backup ‘keeper, a full-back, two central midfielders, a left-winger, an alternative to Bukayo Saka and a striker.

Arsenal’s next five Premier League games

Date

Fulham (home)

April 1st

Everton (away)

April 5th

Brentford (home)

April 12th

Ipswich Town (away)

April 20th

Crystal Palace (home)

April 26th

A fresh centre-forward will be particularly crucial, as Arsenal have long yearned for a prolific vocal point up front as the last missing piece of Arteta’s jigsaw. Long-term injuries to Gabriel Jesus, who could even be out until 2026, and Kai Havertz have also further highlighted the need for a number nine.

According to some media sources, Berta is even gaining a head start on the summer window, with Arsenal opening preliminary talks over Eintracht Frankfurt star Hugo Ekitiké, but the Frenchman isn’t their only attacking target.

Arteta’s “dream” striker target, as per various reports, is Newcastle United star Alexander Isak.

The Swede has been in sensational form under Eddie Howe yet again this season with 23 goals from 33 appearances in all competitions, but Newcastle are not planning to let him go easily despite the rumoured interest from elite sides.

Newcastle United's AlexanderIsak

£125 million is actually one of the cheaper figures to have been mooted by some sections of the press, but even that would require Arsenal to smash their transfer record.

Arsenal will make "important proposal" to sign Alexander Isak

As per Romano, his marquee valuation hasn’t deterred Berta.

Indeed, the respected reporter claims that Arsenal will make an “important proposal” to sign Isak this summer, with Romano sharing an update on his situation for GiveMeSport’s Market Madness podcast.

“We have to see what happens when Arsenal and Liverpool, because I expect these two clubs to arrive with important proposals in the summer,” Romano said.

“And at that stage, we have to see what the player decides to do and also what kind of conversation he will have with Newcastle. But on club side, they keep saying that they will try till the end to extend this contract, to keep the player and to make the face of their project also for the future. So I think it’s going to be a big fight in the summer for this fantastic striker.”

Both Isak and Anthony Gordon have been labelled the Premier League’s “most exciting” and perhaps “most underrated” forward duo by ex-Nigeria international Sunday Oliseh, but it is clear that Arsenal are fully aware of the former’s star quality after repeated links.

The 25-year-old is set to be one of the biggest stories of this summer transfer window, and there is no doubt he’d be a truly transformative signing for Arteta’s side.

Inter to discuss transfer swap deal with Tottenham as they close in on Cesc Fabregas as their new manager

Inter chiefs are heading to London to hold talks with Tottenham over two defenders swapping clubs.

Article continues below

Article continues below

Article continues below

  • Inter to discuss Tottenham swap
  • Two defenders could swap clubs
  • Cesc Fabregas targeted as new boss
Follow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱
  • WHAT HAPPENED?

    Bosses are already in the English capital as they discuss their vacant managerial position with former Arsenal midfielder Cesc Fabregas – but they will also meet with Spurs to negotiate swapping defenders Radu Dragusin and Yann Bisseck, report CalcioMercato.

  • Advertisement

  • Getty Images Sport

    THE BIGGER PICTURE

    Bisseck is wanted by several Premier League clubs, according to the report, including Aston Villa, West Ham and Manchester United. Spurs have been pushing the hardest for his signature, however, and Inter may be prepared to let him go after an inconsistent 2024-25 campaign. Inter could ask for Dragusin to head the other way to fill the void.

  • DID YOU KNOW?

    The talks to appoint Fabregas could hold any deal up, with the report stating that Inter's new coach will have the final say on whether to allow Bisseck to leave the club. Dragusin made 28 appearances in all competitions last season for Tottenham but is stuck behind Cristian Romero and Micky van de Ven in the pecking order and could be allowed to leave.

  • ENJOYED THIS STORY?

    Add GOAL.com as a preferred source on Google to see more of our reporting

  • Getty Images Sport

    WHAT NEXT FOR INTER?

    Inter hope to have a new coach in place in time for their Club World Cup campaign, after Simone Inzaghi left for Al-Hilal. They begin against Monterrey on Wednesday June 18.

Worth more than Solomon: Farke hit the jackpot with "dangerous" Leeds star

Leeds United are currently competing to land promotion from the Championship back to the Premier League at the second time of asking this season.

The Whites are two points clear at the top of the table and four points ahead of Burnley in third place, which means that they have a good grasp on an automatic promotion spot.

Daniel Farke’s side fell just short of promotion in the 2023/24 campaign when they lost 1-0 to Southampton in the play-off final, having finished third in the second tier.

The West Yorkshire outfit beat Millwall 2-0 on Wednesday night to put themselves clear of Sheffield United and Burnley, who were both held to draws on Tuesday night.

Manor Solomon forced an own goal from Jake Cooper in the third minute of the match, before Ao Tanaka wrapped up the three points with five minutes of normal time to go.

Whilst it may not go down as a goal or an assist, it was another contribution to a goal for Tottenham Hotspur loanee Manor Solomon, who has been in terrific form this season.

Manor Solomon's form this season

The Whites swooped to bring the Israel international to Elland Road last summer after the likes of Georginio Rutter and Crysencio Summerville were sold, as their departures left the team needing to find goals and assists from elsewhere.

Solomon had a fairly quiet start to life with the Championship side, with zero goals and one assist in eight appearances, but has now emerged as a reliable performer for Leeds on the left flank.

The 25-year-old winger has started 21 of his 30 appearances in the second tier for the Whites, which shows how much Farke has trusted him, and has recorded seven goals and seven assists in that time.

Solomon is also, somewhat, unfortunate to have only recorded seven assists because he has created 12 ‘big chances’. This suggests that his teammates have let him down at times with their wasteful finishing, as they have not made the most of the high-quality opportunities that the Spurs loanee has created for them.

24/25 Championship

Manor Solomon (per 90)

Percentile rank vs att. mids & wingers

Non-penalty goals

0.34

Top 14%

Assists

0.34

Top 7%

Expected Assisted Goals

0.34

Top 1%

Shot-creating actions

5.10

Top 1%

Successful take-ons

2.60

Top 3%

Progressive carries

4.80

Top 6%

Stats via FBref

As you can see in the table above, the former Fulham man ranks incredibly highly among his positional peers in the Championship in a host of key attacking metrics.

These statistics illustrate how productive the Leeds star is in the final third and as a dribbler who can get his team up the pitch, which also may be why the club are reportedly interested in signing him permanently.

Leeds interested in signing Manor Solomon

The Whites currently have Solomon on a season-long loan deal that is due to expire in the summer, and they do not have an option to make it permanent ahead of the 2025/26 campaign.

Journalist Ben Jacobs recently confirmed, however, that the club do want to sign the Israel international on a permanent basis if they get promoted to the Premier League this year.

He told GIVEMESPORT: “The priority is to get promotion and then assess what targets are possible. Leeds are more focused on finding a playmaker and trying to buy Manor Solomon, while Cameron Archer remains on their radar.”

Jacobs has revealed that they will try to buy him, as well as Southampton centre-forward Cameron Archer, but they must first focus on landing automatic promotion out of the Championship in the next two months.

The Tottenham forward is currently valued at €9m (£7.5m) by Transfermarkt, but it remains to be seen exactly how much Leeds will need to pay to land the exciting forward this summer.

Farke, meanwhile, has already hit the jackpot with another Leeds attacker who is already worth even more than the £7.5m that Solomon is valued at – Joel Piroe.

Leeds struck gold with Joel Piroe

The German head coach arrived at Elland Road in the summer of 2023 and immediately decided to recruit a new centre-forward to bolster his squad.

Market Movers

Leeds eventually swooped to sign Dutch number nine Joel Piroe from Championship rivals Swansea for a reported fee of at least £10m ahead of the 2023/24 campaign, after he had scored 19 goals in the league in the previous season.

The Dutchman, however, made 23 of his starts as an attacking midfielder for Leeds last season, compared to 14 as a striker, and contributed with 14 goals and three assists in all competitions across both positions.

This term, Farke has relied on him as the go-to centre-forward option for the club, in his natural position, and his output at the top end of the pitch has improved as a result of that decision.

Piroe, who was described as “dangerous” by journalist Josh Bunting, has racked up 15 goals and six assists in all competitions for the West Yorkshire outfit, which means that he has already produced more goals and more assists – with two months of the season to go – than he did in the 2023/24 campaign as an attacking midfielder.

The left-footed star’s market value has increased as a result of his impressive form on the pitch for Leeds in the last two years, and his improvement in the current campaign, as it has soared beyond the £10m that was initially paid for him in 2023.

At the time of writing (14/03/2025), Transfermarkt values Piroe at €14m (£11.7m) and this means that his value has gone up since Farke brought him to Elland Road from Swansea last year, and that he is worth significantly more than Solomon.

The Whites have, therefore, hit the jackpot with the 25-year-old star because he has been a terrific performer on the pitch, whilst his value has soared off it.

At the age of 25, Piroe also still has plenty of time left to develop and improve over the years to come, which means that there is time for his value to skyrocket during the remainder of his spell in Yorkshire.

Forget re-signing Phillips: Farke must unleash "exciting" Leeds prodigy

Leeds United can forget about landing Kalvin Phillips by unleashing a young talent.

By
Ethan Lamb

Mar 14, 2025

He is already worth even more than Solomon is at the moment and could be worth millions more, potentially, if Leeds are promoted to the Premier League and he can translate his goalscoring form over to the top-flight.

As prolific as Isak: Liverpool begin talks with "world-class" Nunez upgrade

Liverpool need to win four of their remaining nine Premier League fixtures to lift the title by the end of the season.

Arsenal’s chances of claiming the throne are negligible, owing to Liverpool’s imperious 12-point lead. Arne Slot has been brilliant since replacing Jurgen Klopp last summer, but curiously, the general consensus is that the Reds need to make sweeping changes in the transfer market this summer.

Chiefly, this is because Mohamed Salah is receiving inadequate support from his fellow forwards, with Cody Gakpo the only member providing consistent attacking support through the campaign.

Mohamed Salah

17

12

5

Cody Gakpo

13

5

1

Luis Diaz

18

1

2

Diogo Jota

14

2

1

Darwin Nunez

16

3

4

Federico Chiesa

5

2

1

It’s felt that Darwin Nunez, Diogo Jota and Luis Diaz are all at risk of being axed when the summer market opens its stalls, albeit it’s unlikely all three will be sold.

The most pressing concern is at centre-forward, for sure. Liverpool need a high-class striker, and there’s one name on fans’ lips above all others.

Liverpool's dream striker

Back in December, Sky Sports’ Jamie Carragher hailed Alexander Isak as “the best striker in the Premier League.” Certainly, Newcastle United’s talisman is the most complete, the most athletic, the most energetic.

Newcastle United's AlexanderIsakcelebrates scoring their second goal

He’s a man of many parts, but of course boasts a deadly instinct in front of goal that makes him such a coveted figure, scoring 23 goals and adding five assists across 33 matches in all competitions this term – the latest of which came at Wembley as Liverpool were defeated in the Carabao Cup final.

Liverpool are known admirers, but so are Arsenal and so too are Barcelona. Newcastle, moreover, are – unsurprisingly – against his sale this summer and have whacked a £150m price tag on his name to ward off suitors.

Liverpool do need a fresh forward to replace the struggling Nunez, who was nearly sold to Al-Nassr in January and is expected to depart when the season concludes. But FSG would be foolish to mount all hope on one, tricky-to-attain man.

Liverpool's Isak alternative

Isak’s the dream, for sure. However, dreams are usually expensive, and £150m (or more) would likely exhaust FSG’s summer purse.

Transfer Focus

Mega money deals, controversial moves and big-name flops. This is the home of transfer news and opinion across Football FanCast.

That’s why Jonathan David could be the perfect alternative. Into the final months of his contract with LOSC Lille, the prolific striker’s future has been a hot topic for a while, and Liverpool certainly won’t be alone in their interest.

The i Paper have revealed Liverpool have made contact with the Canadian’s representatives as the end of the season draws near, though a host of top Premier League rivals are also keen and many European parties besides.

Lille'sJonathanDavidcelebrates scoring their fourth goal

Interestingly, Newcastle are monitoring David as a potential replacement for Isak, so who knows how the budding sagas will play out.

Why David would be perfect for Liverpool

David is only 25 years old and has spent most of his senior career fostering his lofty potential in Ligue 1, signed from Belgian club Gent in 2020 for a reported €31.5m (£26m) fee.

It’s always pleasing when a player makes incremental progress through the years. David always had the mark of a high-profile goalscorer, but he’s shown through years of hard graft that he has an all-embracing nature to align with the tactical complexities of top-performing clubs such as Liverpool.

Though some will reserve judgment until David is plying his trade in a division such as the Premier League or La Liga, he’s already been described as “one of the best strikers in the world” by Canadian football expert Tony Marinaro and the data corroborates that claim.

24/25

41

23

10

0.80

23/24

47

26

9

0.74

22/23

40

26

4

0.75

21/22

48

19

0

0.40

20/21

48

13

5

0.37

Interesting that David has become more creative across the past two years; as per FBref, he ranks among the top 15% of forwards across Europe’s top five leagues over the past year for goals per 90 and the top 1% for pass completion, which makes a telling comment on his technical capacity as well as his prolificness.

That goal tally, by the by, is identical to Isak’s this season. To be as clinical as the Sweden star is quite the feat, with just 11 missed big chances in Ligue 1 (having scored 14 times) further underlining his incisiveness.

Such composure and link-up quality would surely see David prove to be a step up from Nunez, who has sadly fallen by the wayside at Anfield, nearly three years on from joining Liverpool from Benfica in a club-record £85m move.

Nunez has only scored seven times for Liverpool since Slot entered the fray, featuring 40 times in 2024/25. Slot has only started the Urugayan across eight Premier League fixtures, further emphasising the absence of trust in his fluency and chances of making a positive impact.

His frenetic nature has made him a valuable option off the bench, but Nunez looks bereft of confidence and still can’t find that rich goalscoring vein that was anticipated when Klopp broke the bank to bring him in.

Darwin Nunez for Liverpool

Isak is the dream target, no doubt. However, described as a “world-class player” by Canadian professional Iain Hume, David is quietly becoming one of the most impressive strikers in Europe, and if his prowess in all its completeness could be transferred to Merseyside, there’s every chance Liverpool will take their football to the next level in Slot’s second season.

Better than Kerkez: Liverpool join the race for "world-class" £50m LB

Liverpool are ready to spend big in the transfer market this summer.

1 ByAngus Sinclair Mar 28, 2025

Bangladesh drop Jahanara, Fargana for T20Is against India

Bangladesh have left out two big names in Jahanara Alam and Fargana Hoque from the women’s T20I side ahead of their three-match series against India this month. Jahanara, who played just one game in their previous series against Sri Lanka in May, was one of five changes in the team.Fargana is Bangladesh’s second-highest scorer in the format, and along with her, allrounder Lata Mondal and left-arm quick Fariha Trisna were also dropped from the side. Left-hand batter Rubya Haider’s knee injury meant she had to be left out too.The experienced Salma Khatun returned to the side alongside batters Dilara Akter, Shathi Rani and 16-year-old Shorna Akter, apart from pace bowler Marufa Akter. Salma, Dilara and Marufa were not in the squad for the Sri Lanka series. Then selector Manjurul Islam had said at the time that Salma was “rested” due to the volume of cricket this year.

Bangladesh T20I squad changes

IN: Dilara Akter, Shathi Rani, Shorna Akter, Marufa Akter, Salma Khatun

OUT: Jahanara Alam, Fargana Hoque, Rubya Haider (wk), Lata Mondal, Fariha Trisna

Selector Sajjad Ahmed said that they brought Salma back to bolster the spin attack, while Dilara, Shathi and Shorna were promising for the shortest format. Sajjad, however, declined to comment on the players dropped from the side, citing his short time spent in the new role.Bangladesh’s batting will depend on Nigar Sultana, the captain, and Shamima Sultana, apart from Dilara, Sobhana Mostary, Murshida Khatun and Shorna. Uncapped Shathi Rani could open in one of the matches, after she was selected on the back of a strong domestic season.The spin attack will have to carry much of the bowling department, as only two pace bowlers were picked: Marufa Akter and the uncapped Disha Biswas. The spin attack comprises Salma, Fahima Khatun, Nahida Akter, Ritu Mondol, Sanjida Akter and Sultana Khatun.The Indian team will arrive in Dhaka on July 6 for the three T20Is on July 9, 11 and 13 at the Shere Bangla National Stadium.Bangladesh squad for India T20Is: Nigar Sultana (capt, wk), Nahida Akter, Dilara Akter, Shathi Rani, Shamima Sultana, Sobhana Mostary, Murshida Khatun, Shorna Akter, Ritu Moni, Disha Biswas, Marufa Akter, Sanjida Akter Meghla, Rabeya Khan, Sultana Khatun, Salma Khatun, Fahima Khatun

Game
Register
Service
Bonus